Rise of religious movements in Asia: Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan as a model
Pakistan is witnessing a rising wave
of religious movements, which have become one of the most prominent players in
the political arena and have an impact on the course of events there.
The news of the Tehreek-e-Labbaik
Pakistan group, which belongs to the Barelvi sect, which is spread in several
countries, most notably Pakistan and India, has topped the scene during recent
months.
The movement escalated its mobilization
against the government of former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in 2018,
and it recently threatened to organize an angry march to Islamabad to
demonstrate against the government of current Prime Minister Imran Khan.
There is a possibility that the
group will continue to play a much larger role than currently after popular
support for it has increased, which has reached very high levels in recent
years.
This has led to great predictions
about the group's growing role in electoral politics, as it was the third
largest party in Punjab in the 2018 elections, and many feel it may make more
headway in the upcoming elections.
The Pakistani government surrendered
to the protests of the group, which was banned on April 14 and then renewed its
protests and demanded the government to close the French embassy in Islamabad
and expel the ambassador.
In October 2020, the movement
organized several demonstrations and blocked the highways leading to Islamabad,
and the ban was lifted following the threat of the angry march.
The government released the
movement's leader, Saad Hossein Razavi, and his name was removed from the list
of banned individuals suspected of terrorist or sectarian acts under the 1997
anti-terror law.
The group focuses on one issue:
contempt of Islam. It mobilized people against attempts to repeal or commute
laws that punish contempt of religion with the death penalty, and it was
accused of participating in riots against the Qadiani sect and succeeded in
2018 in banishing economist Atif Mian, a professor at Princeton University,
from Pakistan’s Economic Advisory Council because of his affiliation with the
Qadianis.
This group is considered one of the
movements that focus on attracting Sufi devotees in the Indian subcontinent and
works on involving them in its political activities, which gain it a greater
presence and popularity among the Punjabi masses. This makes the electoral
ascent scenario likely during the coming period, but it is difficult to predict
the method of this rise, as the movement has many options, including allying
with one of the other parties and entering into a coalition, or running alone
without joining any other party.
But the scenario that some strongly
anticipate is that the movement will continue to operate as a pressure group
without directly participating in the elections, in order not to lose its
popular balance in Punjabi cities and villages and to work on preparing for
strong participation in later elections when it is confident that the electoral
scene will be easily swept.